NYT: ‘Los Angeles Pedestrians Look Forward to Relaxed Jaywalking Law’

The New York Times published Nov. 3, 2022:

“I’m smart enough to know if cars are coming,” said one walker who is glad the old law will come off the books on Jan. 1.

Starting Jan. 1, thanks to the “Freedom to Walk” act, people in California will no longer have to worry so much about making a legal misstep when they are safely crossing a street. Signed into law by Gov. Gavin Newsom, the act was designed to give pedestrians in the state more leeway. No longer will they be charged with an infraction or fined for crossing outside designated intersections — with the caveat that police officers may still give tickets to pedestrians who are creating a safety hazard, in their view.

Dec. 11, 2023, the New York Times reports:

Why Are So Many American Pedestrians Dying at Night?

Sometime around 2009, American roads started to become deadlier for pedestrians, particularly at night. Fatalities have risen ever since, reversing the effects of decades of safety improvements. And it’s not clear why.

What’s even more perplexing: Nothing resembling this pattern has occurred in other comparably wealthy countries. In places like Canada and Australia, a much lower share of pedestrian fatalities occurs at night, and those fatalities — rarer in number — have generally been declining, not rising.

This explosion in pedestrian deaths occurs in just one racial group in America – blacks.

Steve Sailer writes:

The most striking aspect is that the black pedestrian death rate has almost doubled since its low during the Great Recession. Contrary to the conventional wisdom, economic hard times tend to reduce deaths by traffic accident and homicide. This makes sense if you think of them as Deaths of Exuberance, more common when people have ample cash in their wallets.

By 2014, the black pedestrian death rate was back up to the level seen during the housing bubble of 2007, but growth was slowing. Then came the Ferguson Effect, as The Establishment warned cops not to police so proactively, and the black death rate shot upward as motorists sped more and packed more pistols. Indeed, the Ferguson Effect started in Ferguson, Missouri, when officer Darren Wilson shouted at jaywalker Michael Brown to get out of the street and back on the sidewalk.

Growth slowed somewhat in the late 2010s, but then came the Floyd Effect of the 2020s.

Among Hispanics, pedestrian deaths fell sharply with the bursting of the Housing Bubble. (It’s likely that many of the most marginal Latinos returned to Mexico when construction jobs evaporated.) As with homicides, Hispanics didn’t get the message as rapidly as blacks did about the racial reckoning, so their death rate peaked in 2022 rather than in 2021.

Whites have been slowly degenerating for a decade and a half, but didn’t rapidly respond to the racial reckoning.

Asians have kept their pedestrian death rate more or less flat for a decade and a half.

…What would save lives in the short term is going back to the more active policing of bad drivers and bad walkers that we had before we gave Black Lives Matter veto power over law enforcement.

Posted in BLM, Crime | Comments Off on NYT: ‘Los Angeles Pedestrians Look Forward to Relaxed Jaywalking Law’

Understanding Israel’s War In Gaza

John J. Mearsheimer and Sebastian Rosato write in their 2023 book, How States Think: The Rationality of Foreign Policy:

…when states believe their survival is at stake, they do not hesitate to kill large numbers of civilians if such murderous behavior will help them avoid defeat or massive casualties on the battlefield. Britain and the United States blockaded Germany during World War I in an attempt to starve its civilian population and force the Kaiserreich to surrender. The United States also relentlessly firebombed Japanese cities beginning in March 1945 before dropping atomic weapons on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August, to bring World War II to an end and minimize American casualties.

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How Covid Explains My Worldview (1-1-24)

01:00 Different strategies have differing effectiveness in different situations
10:30 Stop saying “we need to build alternative institutions”, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cyyq126kZMI
23:00 Life is a Dinner Table, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zSawhpPzOFs
42:20 People with Bigger Brains are More Intelligent
45:00 Immigrants with less than a bachelor’s degree are a net cost to society
https://www.richardhanania.com/p/amy-wax-versus-the-midwit-gynocrats
49:00 The A-cup woman vs the E-cup woman
54:45 The Times: How the Newspaper of Record Survived Scandal, Scorn, and the Transformation of Journalism, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=153841
58:00 Tucker SOUNDS OFF On Ben Shapiro, Israel, Free Speech And UFOs, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8lIO3B3k7Mo
1:05:30 From the Second Intifada to October 7th (with Daniel Gordis), https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jqYMG8BYScE
1:07:00 Daniel Gordis background, https://www.lukeford.net/profiles/profiles/danny_gordis.htm
1:27:00 Elliott Blatt joins the show to talk about New Year’s Resolution
1:29:00 Elliott wants to dial back Twitter
1:50:00 Fentanyl whores
2:00:00 Elliott’s drinking
2:29:30 Paul Hedderman – Non Duality – Skillman, NJ, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=00se60gh-tc
2:38:00 What makes for a guru? https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=148127

Posted in America, Corona Virus | Comments Off on How Covid Explains My Worldview (1-1-24)

The Times: How the Newspaper of Record Survived Scandal, Scorn, and the Transformation of Journalism

Adam Nagourney writes in this 2023 book:

* September 20, 1972… [New York Times Executive Editor A.M.] Rosenthal sent a note to David R. Jones, the new national editor. “We seem to be taking a beating on the Watergate case from the Washington Post. Let’s talk it over.”

* That Monday morning, a story in The Washington Post by Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein reported that one of those arrested, James W. McCord, Jr., was on the payroll of Nixon’s reelection committee. That was the beginning of a run of stories by Woodward and Bernstein — two reporters on the metropolitan staff — that would humble the Times, on what would prove to be the biggest scandal in Washington in fifty years.

* Watergate would eclipse that. The Times would come close to catching up with the Post, throwing some of its best investigative reporters, among them Seymour Hersh, into the hunt. But Watergate would change American journalism. It would always be known as the Post ’s story, and Rosenthal saw Watergate as the biggest failure of his years running the newsroom. At the time, Rosenthal wanted an early accounting of the front page of the Post every night; clerks from the Washington bureau would wait outside the Post headquarters to retrieve first – edition copies and rush them back to the Times bureau. He ordered the Times to match, in its final editions, any big Watergate revelation the Post had that the Times had missed. It then fell to Rosenthal to write a letter to Ben Bradlee, the executive editor of the Post, with copies to Woodward, Bernstein, and Katharine Graham, the publisher, congratulating his biggest rival for being awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Public Service for its Watergate coverage. “ No jokes this time…Huge applause from Forty – third Street,” he told Bradlee, a reference to their jousting, competitive relationship.
It could not have been easy. As Rosenthal once put it, “He is out to cut my throat and I am out to cut his.” And he held one person responsible for the Times ’s failure on Watergate: Max Frankel, the head of the Washington bureau. I should have fired you, Rosenthal told him.
Watergate happened on Frankel’s watch, though he always resisted much of the blame (and, as would become clear in the coming years, the episode would not harm his career).

* But the Watergate failures spoke to a broader issue: the rules of Washington journalism were changing. The Times was trying to retain its magisterial distance and establishment authority as competing newspapers — led by the Post — turned sharply more adversarial toward the government. Watergate, coming after the disclosures in the Pentagon Papers, had undermined the assumptions that had governed the everyday working relations between journalists and the people they wrote about. Public officials lied. They covered up. They broke the law. At first, Frankel could not imagine Nixon engaging in anything like this. “ Not even my most cynical view of Nixon had allowed for his stupid behavior,” Frankel wrote years later. “There he sat at the peak of his power, why would he personally get involved in tapping the phone not even of his opponent but of only a Democratic party functionary?”
The Times could no longer assume that an event was not news until it had written about it on its front page. There was a demand for aggressive investigative reporting that stepped ahead of the FBI or the police — the kind of reporting that was being done by Woodward and Bernstein. And the standards for what kind of information was needed to back up an explosive story were changing. Rosenthal would call, riled up by the latest dispatch from Woodward and Bernstein. Frankel would assure him he shared his frustration, but he did not know what to do. So many of its rival’s stories gave no hint of sources.
We got beaten on stories that I couldn’t have gotten into The New York Times, he would say to a colleague years later.
The Times had long kept a dignified distance from investigative reporting. Sulzberger wanted Rosenthal to eliminate the phrase “investigative reporter” because it created two classes of reporters. “The government has investigators and The Times reporters,” the publisher said. It was a cautious stance that would cloud the paper’s efforts to recruit investigative reporters and constrain its reporting for another twenty years. Gene Roberts, who was the paper’s national editor, would complain that the Times lacked an investigative mentality. He eventually left to run The Philadelphia Inquirer, which under Roberts would win seventeen Pulitzers over eighteen years.

Where does Adam Nagourney get the idea that Woodward and Bernstein were ahead of the FBI or the police? In the July 1974 issue of Commentary magazine, Edward Jay Epstein wrote:

A sustaining myth of journalism holds that every great government scandal is revealed through the work of enterprising reporters who by one means or another pierce the official veil of secrecy. The role that government institutions themselves play in exposing official misconduct and corruption therefore tends to be seriously neglected, if not wholly ignored, in the press. This view of journalistic revelation is propagated by the press even in cases where journalists have had palpably little to do with the discovery of corruption. Pulitzer Prizes were thus awarded this year to the Wall Street Journal for “revealing” the scandal which forced Vice President Agnew to resign and to the Washington Star/News for “revealing” the campaign contribution that led to the indictments of former cabinet officers Maurice Stans and John N. Mitchell (who were subsequently acquitted), although reporters at neither newspaper in actual fact had anything to do with uncovering the scandals. In the former case, the U.S. Attorney in Maryland had through dogged plea-bargaining and grants of immunity induced witnesses to implicate the Vice President; and in the latter case, the Securities and Exchange Commission and a grand jury had conducted the investigation that unearthed the illegal contribution which led to the indictment of the cabinet officers. In both instances, even without “leaks” to the newspapers, the scandals uncovered by government institutions would have come to the public’s attention when the cases came to trial. Yet to perpetuate the myth that the members of the press were the prime movers in such great events as the conviction of a Vice President and the indictment of two former cabinet officers, the Pulitzer Prize committee simply chose the news stories nearest to these events and awarded them its honors.

The natural tendency of journalists to magnify the role of the press in great scandals is perhaps best illustrated by Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward’s autobiographical account of how they “revealed” the Watergate scandals.1 The dust jacket and national advertisements, very much in the bravado spirit of the book itself, declare: “All America knows about Watergate. Here, for the first time, is the story of how we know. . . . In what must be the most devastating political detective story of the century, the two young Washington Post reporters whose brilliant investigative journalism smashed the Watergate scandal wide open tell the whole behind-the-scenes drama the way it happened.” In keeping with the mythic view of journalism, however, the book never describes the “behind-the-scenes” investigations which actually “smashed the Watergate scandal wide open”—namely the investigations conducted by the FBI, the federal prosecutors, the grand jury, and the Congressional committees. The work of almost all those institutions, which unearthed and developed all the actual evidence and disclosures of Watergate, is systematically ignored or minimized by Bernstein and Woodward. Instead, they simply focus on those parts of the prosecutors’ case, the grand-jury investigation, and the FBI reports that were leaked to them.

The result is that no one interested in “how we know” about Watergate will find out from their book, or any of the other widely circulated mythopoeics about Watergate. Yet the non-journalistic version of how Watergate was uncovered is not exactly a secret—the government prosecutors (Earl Silbert, Seymour Glanzer, and Donald E. Campbell) are more than willing to give a documented account of the investigation to anyone who desires it. According to one of the prosecutors, however, “No one really wants to know.” Thus the government’s investigation of itself has become a missing link in the story of the Watergate scandal, and the actual role that journalists played remains ill understood.

Adam Nagourney writes:

After the late – afternoon Page One conferences, where Punch Sulzberger would sit quietly to the side as the editors debated the news of the day, offering questions but not opinions, they would retire to Rosenthal’s private office to share a bottle of wine and trade gossip about correspondents and salty jokes about pretty women, the kind of banter that was accepted from powerful men of that era.

Only powerful men in that particular era engaged in salty jokes about pretty women? Is Adam Nagourney gay? According to Wikipedia: “Nagourney is gay, as was his predecessor as chief political correspondent at the Times, Rick Berke.”

I’ve never been a powerful man, but I’ve enjoyed that kind of banter for about fifty years now.

Adam Nagourney was called a “major league asshole” by President George W. Bush and many of Adam’s peers agree.

* Nagourney writes:

[Howell] Raines was less driven by ideology than competitiveness. He wanted stories that commanded public attention, that were exciting to write and to read. Every ambitious reporter at the Times knew this was how he measured success, and that included Judith Miller. And the single biggest unanswered question in the summer of 2002, the most obvious target for a story, was the one that had been assigned to Miller and [Michael] Gordon about weapons of mass destruction.

Posted in Journalism | Comments Off on The Times: How the Newspaper of Record Survived Scandal, Scorn, and the Transformation of Journalism

Looking For Signs Of Victory In Gaza (12-31-23)

01:00 The Guardian: As Gaza death toll mounts, Israelis look in vain for any sign of victory, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=153831
05:30 Do we need to talk about group differences, https://www.richardhanania.com/p/amy-wax-versus-the-midwit-gynocrats
07:30 Nathan Cofnas influences Amy Wax
https://twitter.com/MillennialWoes/status/1740100903565431277
08:00 Amy Wax: The Woke and the Asleep: Hanania’s book is bold and well-researched, but he underestimates how attached even right-wing audiences are to the egalitarian fallacy, https://www.theamericanconservative.com/the-woke-and-the-asleep/
11:30 Does Israel plan an ethnic-cleansing of Gaza?
21:00 Steven Pinker vs John Mearsheimer debate the enlightenment, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gNVm-oXFK9k
30:00 How States Think: The Rationality of Foreign Policy, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=153528
43:00 Richard Spencer on Milleniyule, https://twitter.com/MillennialWoes/status/1740100903565431277
1:01:00 Richard Spencer’s GF in late 2016 was Julia Ioffe, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julia_Ioffe
1:04:45 Richard’s infamous Charlottesville rant
1:08:00 Colin Liddell: THE WEIRDEST THING I KNOW ABOUT MY OLD FRIEND RICHARD SPENCER, https://colinliddell.blogspot.com/2023/12/the-weirdest-thing-i-know-about-my-old.html
1:11:00 What lessons can nationalists learn from the collapse of the National Justice Party?
1:24:40 The 13th Step podcast, https://www.npr.org/podcasts/1179417899/the-13th-step
1:28:00 Kristen Ruby, Frame Game Radio, https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/internet/michael-benz-rising-voice-conservative-criticism-online-censorship-rcna119213
1:38:00 Talkline With Zev Brenner with Satmar Ger Yechiel Bloyd who left Judaism on why he joined and left, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fXY4Rp8kYqs
1:49:00 Why the Haredim didn’t participate in the recent Washington D.C. pro-Israel rally, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-PKk8mNlSLk
1:52:00 Samson Raphael Hirsch, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samson_Raphael_Hirsch
1:55:00 Marc Shapiro on Zionism, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FwDfCEQcXo4
2:03:30 Judaism and Islam: Some Historical and Halakhic Perspectives || Dr. Marc Shapiro, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bMfgqwmqVto
2:14:00 Rabbi Seligmann Baer Bamberger, the Wuerzburger Rav (Part 3) || Dr. Marc Shapiro, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-PKk8mNlSLk
2:16:00 Decoding Dennis Prager, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=148127

Posted in America, Gaza, Israel | Comments Off on Looking For Signs Of Victory In Gaza (12-31-23)